TS, if you only have 1 cam body and 1 lens, my suggestion is to leave the lens mounted on the body and store in the dry cabi. Unless you are running out of space in the dry cabi and needs to separate them to store. Just my personal opinion.
I got only 1 lens so far.
So as to minimize the dust particle from entering the camera and lens, should I store them away attached together, in the dry cabinet?
Is there any cons of doing so?
Thanks for the advice.
Tell you a funny joke: I'm in Perth and in Summer as in now, there are lots of flies and other furry bugs. When I changed my prime lens to a UWA lens, a stupid fly flew in when I attached the lens. Guess what? I snapped a few times until the mirror squashed the fly. It was then removed using a lens pen. Violia ... good as new. :bsmilie:
Actually the camera sensor shaking thing can work pretty well. I had a spot of dust when I took a shot at f22. Used the sensor shaking and dust actually came off. So useful that I set it to auto-clean whenever I switch of my camera just to keep the sensor as clean as possible.
A good friend of mine has a free 'screensaver' in his viewfinder. Ants!
AFAIK, in the case of the Canon EOS Integrated Cleaning System (ICS) dust particles falls off the IR cut-off and optical low-pass filter forward of the CMOS sensor and onto an adhesive pad.just wondering,
all the shake off dust, where do they go to? Do they collect in the body and become dust bunnies? :bsmilie:
Tell you a funny joke: I'm in Perth and in Summer as in now, there are lots of flies and other furry bugs. When I changed my prime lens to a UWA lens, a stupid fly flew in when I attached the lens. Guess what? I snapped a few times until the mirror squashed the fly. It was then removed using a lens pen. Violia ... good as new. :bsmilie:
AFAIK, in the case of the Canon EOS Integrated Cleaning System (ICS) dust particles falls off the IR cut-off and optical low-pass filter forward of the CMOS sensor and onto an adhesive pad.